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Search Results

Tune Identifier:"^i_van_hear_my_saviors_gentle_robertson$"

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Tunes

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[Lockend ruft der Heiland sanft mir zu]

Appears in 3 hymnals Composer and/or Arranger: Frank J. Robertson Incipit: 34556 51235 32521 Used With Text: Komm zu mir!

Texts

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Calling Me

Author: Laura E. Newell Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: I can hear my Savior's gentle voice Refrain First Line: I can hear my Savior's voice Used With Tune: [I can hear my Savior's gentle voice]
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Komm zu mir!

Author: F. Munz Appears in 3 hymnals First Line: Lockend ruft der Heiland sanft mir zu Refrain First Line: Sanft und leise ruft mir's zu Used With Tune: [Lockend ruft der Heiland sanft mir zu]

Instances

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Published text-tune combinations (hymns) from specific hymnals
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Calling Me

Author: Laura E. Newell Hymnal: Songs for Work and Worship #138 (1900) First Line: I can hear my Savior's gentle voice Refrain First Line: I can hear my Savior's voice Lyrics: 1 I can hear my Savior’s gentle voice, Calling me, calling me! Shall I heed his summons and rejoice From sin’s bondage evermore to be free? Chorus: I can hear my Savior’s voice, I will make him now my choice, To his loving arms I’ll free, For ‘tis Jesus calling me. 2 Still he pleads in tones so low and sweet, Calling me, calling me! Bids me kneel before the mercy-seat, Saying, Master, I’ll with joy follow thee. [Chorus] 3 I will harken to the voice divine, Calling me, calling me! I will claim his promise to be mine Till in glory I his beauty shall see. [Chorus] Topics: Invitation Languages: English Tune Title: [I can hear my Savior's gentle voice]
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Calling Me

Author: Laura E. Newell Hymnal: The Voice of Melody #14 (1900) First Line: I can hear my Savior's gentle voice Refrain First Line: I can hear my Savior's voice Languages: English Tune Title: [I can hear my Savior's gentle voice]
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Komm zu mir!

Author: F. Munz Hymnal: Jubel-Klänge #14 (1899) First Line: Lockend ruft der Heiland sanft mir zu Refrain First Line: Sanft und leise ruft mir's zu Languages: German Tune Title: [Lockend ruft der Heiland sanft mir zu]

People

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Laura E. Newell

1854 - 1916 Author of "Calling Me" in The Voice of Melody Born: Feb­ru­a­ry 5, 1854, New Marl­bo­rough, Con­nec­ti­cut. Died: Oc­to­ber 13, 1916, Man­hat­tan, Kan­sas. Daughter of Mr. and Edward A. Pixley, but orphaned as an infant, Laura was adopted by her aunt, then Mrs. Hiram Mabie, who at the time lived in New York. In 1858, the Mabie family moved to a farm south of where Wamego, Kansas, now stands. Two years after the move, Mr. Mabie died, and his wife resumed teaching. In 1860, Mrs. Mabie accepted a position in Topeka, Kansas, where she taught many years. Under her tutelage, Laura received her education. As early as age 12, Laura was writing rhymes, and two years later her poems began to appear in local newspapers. She had no thought of a literary career; she simply wrote to give vent to her poetical mind. In 1871, Laura married Lauren Newell, a carpenter from Manhattan, Kansas. They had at least six children, and belonged to the Congregational denomination. In 1873, Laura was listening to an address by a speaker who lamented the death of "genuine" hymns, and she resolved to try her hand in that line of work. That began a long period of writing songs, sacred and secular, services for all anniversary occasions, cantatas, adapting words to music, and music to words. "Mrs. Newell is indeed a prolific writer. Her poems number in the thousands. She has had over eight hundred poems published in a single year, a most remarkable record. The great ease with which Mrs. Newell writes is one of her special gifts. Not long since an order, accompanied by music and titles, was sent her for eight poems to suit. At seven o’clock in the evening she sat down to her organ to catch the music. Then she went to her desk, and at ten o’clock the order was ready for the return mail. Her work pleased the publisher so well that he sent her an order for forty-eight additional poems. Mrs. Newell writes several hundred poems annually. She is a very modest and unpretentious lady, and goes about her daily work as cheerfully as her poems advise others to do. The deeply religious character of the woman stands out boldly in nearly all her work. The next world is apparently as real to her as the present. Her heart is in her work, and to the end of life’s chapter, while able, may she wield her pen to tell the Story to dear to her heart, in verse and song." Hall, pp. 316-17 http://www.hymntime.com/tch/bio/n/e/w/newell_lep.htm

Friedrich Munz

Person Name: F. Munz Author of "Komm zu mir!" in Jubel-Klänge

Frank Jay Robertson

Person Name: Frank J. Robertson Composer of "[I can hear my Savior's gentle voice]" in The Voice of Melody
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